Part 7 (1/2)
”I am afraid I am not an effective _improvisatore_” he replied; ”and the subject, if you will pardon my saying so, seems to me too intimate for mirth. A curse is supposed to rest on this place. The owners of Brockhurst die young and by violent means.”
”We know that already, and look to you to tell us something more, Mr.
March,” Dr. Knott said dryly.
Julius was slightly nettled at the elder man's tone and manner. He answered with an accentuation of his usual refinement of enunciation and suavity of manner.
”There is a term to the curse, a saviour who, according to the old prediction, has the power, should he also have the will, to remove it altogether.”
”Oh, really, is that so! And when does this saviour put in an appearance?” the doctor asked again.
”That is not revealed.”
Julius would very gladly have said nothing further. But Dr. Knott's expression was curiously intent and compelling, as he sat fingering the stem of his wine-gla.s.s. All the ideality of Julius's nature rose in protest against the half-sneering rationalism he seemed to read in that expression. Mrs. Ormiston, who had an hereditary racial appreciation of anything approaching a fight, turned her round eyes first on one speaker and then on the other provokingly, inciting them to more declared hostilities, while she bit her lips in her effort to avoid spoiling sport by untimely laughter or speech.
”But unhappily,” Julius proceeded, yielding under protest to these opposing forces, ”the saviour comes in so questionable a shape, that I fear, whenever the appointed time may be, his appearance will only be welcomed by the discerning few.”
”That's a pity,” Dr. Knott said. He paused a minute, pa.s.sed his hand across his mouth. ”Still, if we are to believe the Bible, and other so-called, sacred histories, it's been the way of saviours from the beginning to try the faith of ordinary mortals by presenting themselves under rather queer disguises.” He paused again, drawing in his wide lips, moistening them with his tongue. ”But since you evidently know all about it, Mr. March, may I make bold to inquire in what special form of fancy dress the saviour in question is reported as likely to present himself?”
”He comes as a child of the house,” Julius answered, with dignity. ”A child who in person--if I understand the wording of the prophecy aright--is half angel, half monster.”
John Knott opened his mouth as though to give pa.s.sage to some very forcible exclamation. Thought better of it and brought his jaws together with a kind of grind. His heavy figure seemed to hunch itself up as in the recoil from a blow.
”Curious,” he said quietly. Yet Julius, looking at him, could have fancied that his weather-beaten face went a trifle pale.
But Mrs. Ormiston, in the interests of a possible fight, had contained herself just as long as was possible. Now she clapped her hands, and broke into a little scream of laughter.
”That's just the most magnificently romantic thing I ever heard,” she cried. ”Come now, this requires further investigation. What's our baby like, Dr. Knott? I've seen nothing but an indistinguishable ma.s.s of shawls and flannels. Have we, by chance, got an angelic monstrosity up-stairs without being aware of it?”
”Charlotte!” Roger Ormiston called out sternly. The young man looked positively dangerous. ”This conversation has gone quite far enough. I agree with March, it may all be stuff and nonsense, not worth a second thought, still it isn't a thing to joke about.”
”Very well, dear boy, be soothed then,” she returned, making a little grimace and putting her head on one side coquettishly. ”I'll be as solemn as nine owls. But you must excuse a momentary excitement. It's all news to me, you know. I'd no notion Katherine had married into such a remarkable family. I'm bound to learn a little more. Do you believe it's possible at all, Dr. Knott, now tell me?”
”The fulfilment of prophecy is rather a wide and burning question to embark on,” he said. ”With Captain Ormiston's leave, I think we'd better go back to the point we started from and drink the little gentleman's health. I have my patient to see again, and it is getting rather late.”
The lady addressed, laughed, held up her gla.s.s, and stared round the table with a fine air of bravado, looking remarkably pretty.
”Fire away, Roger, dear fellow,” she said. ”We're loaded, and ready.”
Thus admonished, Ormiston raised his gla.s.s too. But his temper was not of the sweetest, just then; he spoke forcedly.
”Here's to the boy,” he said; ”good luck, and good health, and,” he added hastily, ”please G.o.d he'll be a comfort to his mother.”
”Amen,” Julius said softly.
Dr. Knott contemplated the contents of his gla.s.s, for a moment, whether critically or absently it would have been difficult to decide. But all the harshness had gone out of his face, and his loose lips worked into a smile pathetic in quality.
”To the baby.--And I venture to add a clause to your invocation of that heartless jade, Dame Fortune. May he never lack good courage and good friends. He will need both.”